Description
Better Resource Hints will make your WordPress site or application faster and generally more performant by intelligently leveraging resource hints like prefetch, preload, preconnect, and server push.
As it stands, WordPress isn’t that bad about providing a base level of these hints. In fact, a basic, dedicated API has been shipped since version 4.6.. However, this functionality only scratches the service, providing only dns-prefetch
tags out of the box, and there’s growing opportunity to take advantage of different hints as they are introduced and gain more browser support. Specifically, this plugin focuses on the following types of hints for your styles and JavaScript assets:
Preconnecting – This hint is similar to “dns-prefetch,” but a beefier version. Instead of just resolving the DNS, the preconnect hint handles TLS negotiations and TCP handshakes, resulting in reduced page latency.
Preloading – Preloading occurs when the browser is told it can start downloading an asset in the background early during page load, instead of waiting until the asset is explicitly called to start the process. This hint is most beneficial for assets loaded later on in the page, but are nonetheless essential to the page’s functionality. More often than not, this is a JavaScript file. Enabling this results in an overall faster load time, and quicker time to interactive.
Prefetching – Prefetching assets is similar to preloading, but the assets are downloaded in low priority for the purpose of caching them for later use. For example, if a user hits your home page and is likely to go to a page that uses a heavy JavaScript file, it’s wise to prefetch that asset on the home page, so it’s cached and ready to go on the next. Again, the result is a quicker subsequent page load, quicker time to interactive, and an improved overall user experience. This is different from DNS prefetching, which will only resolve the DNS of a resource’s host, and not actually download the resource itself.
Server Push – If enabled, server push will tell your server to start delivering an asset before the browser even asks for it. This results in a much faster delivery of key assets, and be toggled on for both preloaded, prefetched, and preconnected assets. Note: This feature requires a server that supports server push, and is the most experimental strategy this plugin provides.
As with any sort of performance-enhancing technique, just be aware that they should be used judiciously, and that the results you see will depend on the size the of resources your site loads, as well as how your server is configured. For additional reading, see some of the resources below:
Preload, Prefetch, & Priorities in Chrome
Preloading Key Requests
Preload: What’s It Good For?
Resource Hints – What is Preload, Prefetch, and Preconnect?
What Makes This Plugin Stand Apart?
There’s no shortage of plugins out there that aim to leverage resource hints for boosting performance. However, I’ve seen that several of them make the following mistakes:
Inflexible Hint Management Many similar plugins only provide very limited flexibility in their options, and only allow setting hints globally for every page, regardless of whether the resources are actually needed on the page. This can often result in unecessarily bloaging your bandwidth, since hints on several pages are effectively useless. In some cases, this could actually lead to a less performant site. This plugin attempts to provide options to manage hints more flexibily and intelligently, meaning you won’t be unecessarily preloading assets in the background when they’re not even needed on the page.
Misunderstanding What Different Hints Do I’ve come across some plugins that fail to understand and leverage different hints like they were designed. For example, promising that assets are being preloaded, when they’re actually being prefetched. These and other hints have very different purposes, and should not be interchangably used if you want them to impact your site in the most effective way. This plugin attempts to leverage these hints in way to maximize their effectiveness. For example, BHR won’t prefetch any assets that are enqueued on the page, because that’s just not how the prefetch hint is designed to be used.
Is Better Resource Hints perfect? Absolutely not. That’s why I encourage any constructive feedback or bug reports to be sent my way immediately, so that I can’t improve this plugin as quickly as possible.
A Note About Preloading CSS
Because of their high placement on a page, if the option is enabled, your CSS files will be asyncronously preloaded, and then turned into a stylesheet once they’ve completely loaded. The advantage to doing this is that while the files are downloading, they won’t block the rest of the page from rendering, resulting an overall faster page load.
However, this also means that there may be a flash of unstyled content on the page for a brief moment as the files download. To prevent this, it’s recommended to only preload CSS files that are not critical to the initial view of the page. This will allow you to gain some performance points without sacrificing use experience as the page loads.
Filters
The following filters are exposed for your use.
/**
* Modify the HTML link generated for preconnecting hosts.
*
* @param string $link (HTML tag)
* @param string $url (URL of the host)
* @return string
*/
add_filter('better_resource_hints_preconnect_tag', function ($link, $url) {
return $url;
}, 10, 2);
/**
* Modify the HTML link generated for prefetching hosts.
*
* @param string $link (HTML tag)
* @param string $handle (WP handle of the resource
* @param string $type (script or style)
* @return string
*/
add_filter('better_resource_hints_prefetch_tag', function ($link, $handle, $type) {
return $url;
}, 10, 3);
/**
* Modify the HTML link generated for preloading hosts.
*
* @param string $link (HTML tag)
* @param string $handle (WP handle of the resource
* @param string $type (script or style)
* @return string
*/
add_filter('better_resource_hints_preload_tag', function ($link, $handle, $type) {
return $url;
}, 10, 3);
What Happens Out of the Box?
Upon activation, Better Resource Hints will optimize your resource hints in a conservative, low-risk way by only doing two things out of the box:
- Preloading JavaScript assets enqueued in the footer.
- Setting preconnect hints for all third party hosts that already have dns-preconnect hints.
Using the Plugin
After activation, you are able to adjust settings to tweak optimization as seen fit. As a means of testing your optimizations, use a tool like Google Lighthouse to measure the impact of these changes on your site’s performance.
As mentioned, the techniques used here are largely supported by modern browsers, but your results may vary depending on the amount of assets being loaded on your site, as well as your server configuration.
Feedback
You like it? Email or tweet me. You hate it? Email or tweet me.
Regardless of how you feel, your review would be greatly appreciated!
Screenshots
Installation
- Download the plugin and upload to your plugins directory, or install the plugin through the WordPress plugins page.
- Activate the plugin through the ‘Plugins’ page.
- Use the Settings -> Better Resource Hints screen to choose whether and which assets to preload, prefetch, and server push.
FAQ
- What about browsers that don’t support these resource hints?
-
If someone’s using an older browser that doesn’t support these hints, nothing will break. The generated tags will just be skipped over and the page will load as normal. The one slight exception to this is preloading CSS. Because the original
link
tags are completely converted torel="preload"
, there would be nothing on which to fall back. To remedy this, a small polyfill is included by this plugin, so you can be at ease. - How can I test my site’s performance to verify improvements?
-
To start, I’d recommend Google Lighthouse. It’s built into Google Chrome and there’s also a command line utility available. Beyond that, you could try out something like WebPagetest or a more enterprise solution like SpeedCurve.
- How can I specifically verify that preloading is working?
-
First, ensure that your source code contains
<link rel="preload" ... >
tags. Then, in Chrome, inspect the page and open up the Network tab. Refresh the page, and filter for your JS files to make things a little easier. Preloaded assets will have a “Priority” of “High.” - How can I verify that prefetching is working?
-
Remember, this is different from
dns-prefetch
, and will download assets in the background as to cache them for future use. To verify a resource is being prefetched, first ensure that your source code contains<link rel="prefetch" ... >
tags. Then, in Chrome, inspect the page and open up the Network tab. Refresh the page, and filter for your JS files to make things a little easier. Prefetched assets will have a “Priority” of “Low.” - How can I verify HTTP/2 server push is working?
-
First, ensure your server is configured to support server push. Then, you can use Chrome’s net internals to inspect each HTTP/2 session and which assets are being pushed. Navigate to
chrome://net-internals/#http2
in Chrome to view this information.
Reviews
Contributors & Developers
“Better Resource Hints” is open source software. The following people have contributed to this plugin.
ContributorsTranslate “Better Resource Hints” into your language.
Interested in development?
Browse the code, check out the SVN repository, or subscribe to the development log by RSS.
Changelog
1.0.0
- Initial release.
1.1.0
- Introduce support for generating preconnect hints.
- Improve user interface.
- Improve documentation.
1.1.1
- Append plugin version to admin assets to ensure they’re not cached after updates.
- Fix miscellaneous UI-related bugs appearing in the admin.
1.1.2
- Fix bug causing duplicate preload links being generated for some assets.
- Fix bug causing preconnect links to have incorrectly formatted
href
values. - Fix typos in documentation.
1.1.3
- Add fallback for cases when no assets are registered.
- Clean up plugin code structure.
- Switch from yarn to npm for JS package management.
- Update preload polyfill for CSS preloading.
- More intelligently load preload polyfill.